The Start of Vintage Baseball Card Collecting
April 8th 2008 12:07 pm
Baseball card collecting started as a hobby way back in the 1800’s when baseball equipment companies started promoting their products using sports cards. It was only later that companies like the American Tobacco Co., American Caramel Company, Goudey Gum Co. and the O-Pee-Chee company started producing cards to promote their products. However, in a write-up about vintage baseball cards, these are the cards that hold a special place in the minds of the old baseball card collectors. A beginner to sports cards has heard of valuable cards, like the Honus Wagner card, that adds both value and prestige to baseball card collecting. Needless to say, that the Honus Wagner card was not the only vintage card of the old era.
Vintage cards include sets like the Old Judge series of cards manufactured by Goodwin and Company of New York. They were very popular baseball cards of their time. When popularity for baseball started to take off and baseball became the national pastime of America, these rare baseball cards were just being issued. After this came the T-206 and T-205 set of cards manufactured by the American Tobacco Company, popularly known as the white-bordered and gold-bordered cards, respectively. These cards still remain top favorites among collectors, for their baseball card collection, because of their attractive design, easy to handle nature, thick paper and also because they featured some of the great players like Joe Tinker, Frank Chance, Ty Cobb, Frank Bowerman, Johnny Evers and many others, including, of course, Honus Wagner.
After the tobacco industry, it was the confectionaries that entered into manufacturing valuable baseball cards. The early baseball cards of this era included the cards of players like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig and these definitely add weight to your old baseball card collection. Later on, of course, came the various gum companies, like the Bowman Gum Company, Topps Gum Company and other. Notable amongst their old sports cards is the famous Mickey Mantle card that still eludes the baseball card collection of many avid baseball card collectors.